Mormonism Deconstructed by Fulfilled Eschatology

Mormonism rebuilds systems Christ ended. Fulfilled eschatology renders its structure unnecessary.

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Mormonism Deconstructed by Fulfilled Eschatology

TGNN critiques Mormonism through the lens of fulfilled eschatology, showing that its structure and doctrines rely on a continuation of material religion—something Christ ended in 70 A.D.
ExplanationMormonism, like many modern religions, is built on the idea that God continues to work through material systems—priesthoods, temples, ordinances, and authoritative leaders. TGNN’s fulfilled eschatology challenges this premise entirely.By teaching that all prophecy was fulfilled and the old covenant ended in 70 A.D., TGNN exposes the foundation of Mormonism as unnecessary and incompatible with the finished work of Christ. The restored priesthood, temple ordinances, and continuing revelation model are all based on the rebuilding of what Jesus fulfilled and replaced.Fulfilled eschatology affirms that there are no longer any sacred systems or intermediaries. God now relates to individuals directly, spiritually, and without hierarchy—making the institutional claims of Mormonism irrelevant to the present age.

Mormonism Deconstructed by Fulfilled Eschatology

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